Bridging Faith and Science to Combat the Overdose Crisis Series - Sept. 20, 2021
Second in a Series | September 20, 2021
- 1619 to 2019
- America’s Opioid Epidemic
- Bridging Faith and Science to Combat the Overdose Crisis
- COVID-19 Events
- Back To School 2020
- COVID-19 and Kids: Impacts, Uncertainties, and the Role of Vaccines
- Coronavirus Webcast
- How to Get Reopening Right
- Inside Taiwan’s Response to COVID-19
- Preserving the Scientific Integrity of Getting to COVID-19 Vaccines: From Clinical Trials to Public Allocation
- Rethinking the U.S. COVID-19 Response
- The Path to Reversing Troubling Trends
- We Stand With Public Health
- Webcast With Johns Hopkins Experts
- What the American Rescue Plan Means for Public Health
- Dean’s Symposium on Ebola
- From Science to Story
- Give It Your Best Shot: Reaching the Vaccine-Hesitant Young
- Measles Rises Again
- Preprints and Peer Review in a Pandemic
- Summit on Reducing Gun Violence in America
- Surviving Trauma
- The Vulnerability of Health Care in Conflict: Ukraine and Beyond
- Professorship Dedication Ceremonies
Faith leaders provide critical support for individuals, families, and communities impacted by substance use disorders, and they are ideally positioned to raise awareness and prompt action. However, their contribution—and untapped promise—as a means to address harms arising from substance use disorders has often been overlooked.
President Bill Clinton is convening leaders from across the faith and public health communities to take action on the overdose crisis in 2021 and beyond. This work is more important than ever before, with an estimated 93,000 individuals dying from a drug overdose in the United States in 2020, the most of any year on record.
Through a partnership with the Clinton Foundation, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and The Centre for Responsible Leadership, national leaders from faith and science will convene to explore the promise of a collaborative relationship, to reduce stigma about addiction, educate about prevention, treatment, and recovery, and advance policies and programs that save lives.
Faith and Science Leaders Met on September 20, 2021
The next convening hosted by President Bill Clinton focused on how local, state, and national government policy, informed by critical research, is necessary to address substance use disorders and reverse a dangerous trend of increasing overdose deaths. The conversation was moderated by Dr. Leana Wen, emergency physician, public health professor at George Washington University, and nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution; and featured Dr. Nora D. Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health; and Sister Simone Campbell, a Roman Catholic Sister of Social Service, religious leader, attorney, and author with extensive experience in public policy and advocacy for systemic change.
This discussion followed an event hosted by President Clinton in May on the role of racial and ethnic disparities in the addiction and overdose crisis, which featured CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta; Bishop Vashti McKenzie of the African Methodist Episcopal Church; and Dr. David Satcher, 16th Surgeon General of the United States.
Speakers
President William Jefferson Clinton
Founder and Board Chair, Clinton Foundation
42nd President of the United States
H.E. Dr. Mohammad bin Abdulkarim Al-Issa
Chairman of The Centre for Responsible Leadership
Sister Simone Campbell, JD
Roman Catholic Sister of Social Service
Former Executive Director of NETWORK
Ellen J. MacKenzie, PhD ’79, ScM ’75
Dean
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor
Bloomberg School of Public Health
Nora D. Volkow, MD
Director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse
Leana Wen, MD, MSc
CNN Medical Analyst
Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
Columnist, Washington Post
Public Health Professor, George Washington University
Former Baltimore City Health Commissioner
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